 Congressman Aspenall on the House Flower on one. Wayne. Yes, Mr. President. Secretary Udall is here with me. And we're talking about a rather urgent proposal that we thought we ought to recommend. But before I did, I want to talk to you about it and get you to help us if you could, or give me your approval if you could. I'll let him outline to you very briefly what I thought is, and let's help me if you can. Go ahead, Stu. Wayne, the problem, and we're really between a rock and a hard place on this, is with the redwood. This fellow that owns the land in there is cutting. He has land outside the park, trees outside the park that he could cut. It cracks. If you're about to recreation, knows this thing very well. I talked with him when he was in at the time of the Senate hearings, and he refused to negotiate this. We told him we'd pay him whatever the extra cost was. And he's just literally cutting down the park. Well, this would be a little emergency bill. There's never been a bill like this, of course I know. And we would suspend his right to cut for a year to give Congress time to act. How would you suspend? I'll let it be in effect, Wayne, the purchase of that ride. It'd be sort of an unusual easement. The purchase of the, in other words, we'd prohibit him from doing something with his property. He was in the small area, the smaller of the areas that have been recommended. Oh, he owns the... Yes, that's right. This is the area the administration has recommended, Wayne. As far as I'm concerned, that's all right. Now, I'm leaving in the morning, and this has to be done with O.B. O'Brien. And I'll get O.B. O'Brien. I'll tell him that this is all right. And as soon as the bill gets up here, why, in this small part, why, see if he can't rush it through. All right, wonderful, Wayne. Okay. There's another thing. Do you represent Denver? No, no, Mr. President. I represented the area as big as New England, but it's outside of Denver by 38 miles on one side and 22 on the other. I'll do something for you sometime, but I was never as pleased as any visit I ever had, the one in Denver. Mr. President, I could see how you were pleased, and I thought wonderful because of that. Well, I just... You figure out something I can do in your district sometime, even if it denounds you. Okay. Let me come and do it. Okay. Well, I told Mr. Udall to work with Mr. O'Brien, and I'll speak to Mr. O'Brien because I'm down home, and starting from next Wednesday, taking now, and I'll come back only when I am commanded to come back, and Mr. McCormick knows it, but I'll come back if I have to. All right, you let me know anywhere I can ever help you. Okay. Thank you, Mr. President.